Coinbase bankruptcy wording triggers warnings to move crypto off exchanges

Share This Post

On May 10, crypto exchange Coinbase released its Q1 2022 earnings report doing little to calm choppy market conditions.

It showed net revenue down 53% from the previous quarter, to $1.165 billion, and a net loss of $430 million. Mizuho Analyst Dan Dolev attributed this to falling trading volume due to the early arrival of crypto winter.

“Crypto winter has come early, and temperatures are dropping fast.”

Shares in the largest US exchange dropped 44% on the day as investors came to terms with the worse than expected performance.

Coinbase made its Nasdaq debut in April 2021. Its mainstream TradFi arrival was supposed to herald a new era, achieving a first-day closing price of $328.28. But more than a year later, $COIN is trading 78% down from its debut closing price.

Crypto exchange Coinbase's share price
Source: google.com

What’s more, some investors were surprised to discover a bankruptcy disclosure statement in the report. It states customers could be treated as unsecured creditors, meaning they may not get their funds back should the firm go bust.

What’s this about bankruptcy?

Crypto Underwriter at Relm Insurance, Sophia Zaller, drew attention to the bankruptcy disclosure, calling it a red flag. She signed off the tweet warning Coinbase users to move their funds off the exchange.

The specific wording said customers’ funds might be thought of as the property of a bankrupt estate. Should the firm go bankrupt, those funds could be subject to bankruptcy proceedings and, therefore, this may classify customers as unsecured creditors.

“custodially held crypto assets may be considered the property of a bankrupt estate, in the event of bankruptcy, the crypto assets we hold in custody on behalf of our customers could be subject to bankruptcy proceedings and as such customers could be treated as our general unsecured creditors.”

In the event of a firm going bankrupt, entities owed money are paid in a particular order per Section 507 of the Bankruptcy Code. First in line are secured creditors, next are unsecured creditors, and stockholders are last.

Is Coinbase too big to fail?

Last crypto winter was characterized by a plethora of crypto firms going bust under the harsh trading conditions.

The most prominent example was Coinnest, which was South Korea’s third-largest exchange. Coinnest issued a statement that said its closure was the natural result of the drop-off in trading volume.

With Coinbase’s trading volume down 40% in the first quarter, the warning signs are there. But then again, is Coinbase too big to fail?

The post Coinbase bankruptcy wording triggers warnings to move crypto off exchanges appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Bitcoin $178K Target In Sight? Analyst Highlights Bollinger Band Retest Mirroring Jan. 2024 Rally

Bitcoin has been on a correction path since it reached a new all-time high of $108,135 on December 17 Notably, this correction has seen the leading cryptocurrency decline by about 10% up until the

‘$600M Would Buy a Lot of Bitcoin’: Microstrategy Boss Steers Bezos Wedding Drama Toward Crypto

Michael Saylor, co-founder and executive chairman of Microstrategy, brought bitcoin into the spotlight during an online exchange with Jeff Bezos on X The Amazon founder found himself in the headlines

El Salvador Reinforces Bitcoin Allegiance: Purchases BTC in Defiance of IMF Agreement

The government of El Salvador has clarified that it will continue pushing bitcoin as part of its economic strategy, even as it inked an agreement with the IMF to wind down its bitcoin operations El

XRP Historic Moment Coming In 2025? This Crypto Exchange Believes So

In the cryptocurrency space, XRP is gaining much attention, and many people are making predictions regarding its prospects for 2025 Bitstamp, a cryptocurrency exchange, excites investors with its

Stablecoin Frenzy: USDE Nears $6B as USD0 Rockets Past $1B in Market Supply

Over the past month, the stablecoin market has swelled over $200 billion, and two fiat-backed tokens have experienced eye-catching expansions Ethena’s yield-generating stablecoin, USDE, has

Hex Founder Richard Heart Included in Europol’s Most Wanted List

Richard Shueler, also known as Richard Heart, the founder of Hex, Pulsechain, and Pulsex, has been included in Europol’s most wanted criminals list Shueler’s profile is listed as wanted